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DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0630531100
¤ OpenAccess: Green
This work has “Green” OA status. This means it may cost money to access on the publisher landing page, but there is a free copy in an OA repository.

Convergent evolution of perenniality in rice and sorghum

Fengyi Hu,Dayun Tao,Eric Sacks,Binying Fu,Peng Xu,J. Li,Yayun Yang,Kenneth L. McNally,G. S. Khush,Andrew H. Paterson,Z.-K. Li

Biology
Sorghum
Perennial plant
2003
Annual and perennial habit are two major strategies by which grasses adapt to seasonal environmental change, and these distinguish cultivated cereals from their wild relatives. Rhizomatousness, a key trait contributing to perenniality, was investigated by using an F(2) population from a cross between cultivated rice (Oryza sativa) and its wild relative, Oryza longistaminata. Molecular mapping based on a complete simple sequence-repeat map revealed two dominant-complementary genes controlling rhizomatousness. Rhz3 was mapped to the interval between markers OSR16 [1.3 centimorgans (cM)] and OSR13 (8.1 cM) on rice chromosome 4 and Rhz2 located between RM119 (2.2 cM) and RM273 (7.4 cM) on chromosome 3. Comparative mapping indicated that each gene closely corresponds to major quantitative trait loci (QTLs) controlling rhizomatousness in Sorghum propinquum, a wild relative of cultivated sorghum. Correspondence of these genes in rice and sorghum, which diverged from a common ancestor approximately 50 million years ago, suggests that the two genes may be key regulators of rhizome development in many Poaceae. Many additional QTLs affecting abundance of rhizomes in O. longistaminata were identified, most of which also corresponded to the locations of S. propinquum QTLs. Convergent evolution of independent mutations at, in some cases, corresponding genes may have been responsible for the evolution of annual cereals from perennial wild grasses. DNA markers closely linked to Rhz2 and Rhz3 will facilitate cloning of the genes, which may contribute significantly to our understanding of grass evolution, advance opportunities to develop perennial cereals, and offer insights into environmentally benign weed-control strategies.
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    Convergent evolution of perenniality in rice and sorghum” is a paper by Fengyi Hu Dayun Tao Eric Sacks Binying Fu Peng Xu J. Li Yayun Yang Kenneth L. McNally G. S. Khush Andrew H. Paterson Z.-K. Li published in 2003. It has an Open Access status of “green”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.